See the transformation


AI-generated industrial home theater redesign from a single photo
How to get Industrial Home Theater designs
1. Upload your photo
Take a photo of your room in good daylight and upload it directly from your phone or computer. No account required to try.
2. Select style and room type
Choose your design theme and confirm the room type. Add any specific details or requirements in the optional text field.
3. Download your designs
The AI generates your redesigned room in 30 to 60 seconds. Review the result, and download or share as needed.
Industrial design principles
Industrial design treats a building's infrastructure as a feature rather than something to hide. Exposed brick, steel beams, concrete floors, and visible ductwork form the backdrop. Against that raw shell, leather, worn wood, and vintage factory pieces create spaces that feel lived-in from day one.
Expose the building rather than covering it
If you have original brick, structural beams, or concrete, treat them as assets. Sandblasting brick, stripping paint from columns, or leaving ceiling joists visible is almost always a better starting point than adding faux-industrial cladding on top of a conventional interior.
Balance raw with refined
Unrelieved roughness quickly becomes oppressive. Pair concrete floors with a soft area rug, contrast steel shelving with warm leather seating, or add linen curtains against an exposed brick wall. The tension between raw and refined is what gives the style its energy.
Source factory and workshop furniture
Authentic industrial furniture — metal lockers repurposed as wardrobes, factory stools used at a kitchen island, vintage filing cabinets as side tables — carries genuine history. Flea markets, industrial surplus dealers, and architectural salvage yards are better sources than retail replicas.
Use Edison bulbs and adjustable metal fixtures
Lighting in an industrial space should look mechanical and deliberate. Exposed bulbs on pendant cords, clip-on metal reflectors, and track lighting on conduit all suit the aesthetic. Warm filament bulbs soften the rawness of the materials around them without compromising the overall character.
Home Theater design considerations
A dedicated home theater room exists to maximise the audio-visual experience of watching film and television, which means its design brief is unusually technical. Every element — wall colour, seat arrangement, acoustic treatment, projector or screen placement, and lighting — either supports or undermines the viewing experience. Understanding these relationships before committing to finishes is particularly valuable.
Control ambient light completely
Projected images and even high-quality screens lose significant contrast and colour accuracy in the presence of ambient light. Full blackout window treatments are non-negotiable in a dedicated cinema room. Walls should be painted in dark, matte, non-reflective finishes — deep grey, charcoal, or dark navy are common choices — to prevent reflected light from the screen washing out dark areas of the image. Any bias lighting behind the screen (used to reduce eye strain) should be warm-toned and very low intensity.
Address acoustics from the room-planning stage
Bare walls and hard floors create reflected sound that degrades audio quality in ways that expensive speaker upgrades cannot overcome. Acoustic treatment in a home theater should address first-reflection points — the side walls and ceiling at the position where sound from the speakers first bounces before reaching the listener. Bass traps in corners control low-frequency buildup. Acoustic panels, heavy curtains, upholstered seating, and thick carpeting all contribute to sound absorption. These need to be planned into the room's design, not added as afterthought decoration.
Plan tiered seating for rooms deeper than 3.5 metres
In a long room with more than one row of seating, the second row will have obstructed sightlines unless it is elevated. A raised platform of 15–20cm behind the front row resolves this cleanly. The platform also provides a natural housing location for in-floor conduits routing speaker cables and power to the rear row. If the room depth allows for only one row, this consideration does not apply, but it is essential to plan for cable management from the start regardless.